![]() “We met in Texas at a bar with his great dad and both came with me to my book signing where Riley actually helped unpack my books and hand them out. Gutfeld, who was wearing a Power Trip t-shirt given to him by Gale, added: “We laughed at how people think it’s wrong for people who disagree to be friends.” Gale was an outspoken progressive, while Greg is a Libertarian. “The phone call lasted two and a half hours,” Greg said in his tribute to the deceased Riley. The best thing that emerged from the episode was that Greg and Riley struck up a friendship. The band, however, didn’t appreciated the gesture and asked Greg via Twitter to ‘cease and desist.’ Greg Gutfeld is a confessed Rock and Roll fan, so it’s no surprise that he played two songs from the Power Trip’s 2017 album Nightmare Logic during one of his shows. ![]() All I know is that I don’t like the boxes of any ideology.” Greg paid tribute to deceased Power Trip frontman Riley Gale despite the pair having divergent political views I resist all ideologies… I guess, I don’t know what I am. He told The Blaze, “When I went to Berkeley by being around liberals I became a conservative and I think by being around conservatives I became more of a libertarian. ![]() However, at this moment, he states that he does not belong to any political group. He realized that he was neither a liberal nor a conservative, but he was a libertarian. He started to reevaluate his political opinions once he got to UC Berkeley. Greg’s liberal inclinations helped him with his grades, but after several debates, he realized that he was a fraud. I realized the more you seemed to care about something, the more the teachers cared about you and your friends.” Where I went to school, if you collected signatures for the nuclear freeze, you got extra credit. “As a teenager, I was liberal, it helped me in school. In high school, he was a liberal because it was benefited his grades. Greg’s political inspirations changed as he furthered his education. You need religion for atheists I guess is what he’s getting at.” His experiences at school shaped his political idealsĪfter graduating from Junipero Serra High School, Greg attended the University of California, Berkeley. He argues, ‘Religion is a good thing even if you’re an atheist, so what are you gonna do about it? How are you gonna replace it? You know, you can’t just trash something and then think that life goes on because it doesn’t. “That’s why I really like Alain de Botton, a great philosopher-writer who’s an atheist and he talks about this a lot. Greg argues the world needs to find a way to realize the benefits of religion without imposing religious beliefs on people. He was an altar boy growing up, and it helped him develop socially and build bonds with his community. However, he understands and appreciates the benefits of church and religion in the community. Gutfeld was raised as a Catholic growing up, but he confesses to being non-religious. Greg was born in San Mateo, California, on 12th September 1964 to Alfred Jack Gutfeld and Jacqueline Bernice.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |